Cup remains National treasure
Rick Devereux
The Costa Mesa Little League season came to a close Saturday at Costa
Mesa High with an impressive display of hitting, pitching and
fielding by the National League All-Stars.
The red-clad Nationals beat the green-wearing Americans, 10-0, to
win the Mayorâs Cup for the fourth consecutive year and fifth time
since its inception in 1997. The Nationals beat the Americans, 2-1,
on Thursday at TeWinkle in the opener to propel them to a sweep in
the best-of-three series.
âI told the kids that we didnât want to be the team that loses the
Cup,â National Manager Clint Brown said. âWeâve had it the last three
years and we didnât want to be the team to give it back.â
The Nationals scored five runs in the fifth inning to put the game
out of reach and secure the victory.
The first three batters reached base with hits into left field,
with Eusebio Castillo hitting a two-run single to the left-center
field gap. Two batters later Kevin Kiser lined a ball up the middle
to score Eusebio. Nick Federiconi singled up the middle next,
followed by Eric Mickleson driving in Eusebio with shot that hit the
fence in center field. Federiconi scored the fifth run when Gian-Paul
Stebbins hit a deep drive that hit the fence down the left-field
line.
When the inning was over, the Nationals collected five runs off
seven hits. Brown credits his team for following directions in the
final game of the season for the hitting display.
âWe faced [that pitcher] in the regular season and knew he had a
great curveball, so I told my guys to [move] forward in order to take
the break away from the breaking ball,â he said. âIf you do that,
itâs a nice, easy pitch over the middle.â
As high-scoring as the game was, it could have been worse for the
American All-Stars. In the bottom of the fist, the Nationals had the
bases loaded with one out, but the American defense stepped up to
only allow one run. Ryan Cherney, who finished the game 3 for 3 with
a walk and four runs scored, singled to right and scored the first
run of the game on Mike Markovskyâs RBI single to right.
âIt could have been a mercy-rule [win for the Nationals],â Brown
said. âThey really made some good plays to get them out of that jam.â
Second baseman Brandon Kelly gobbled up a ground ball and threw
out a runner at home plate for the second out and shortstop Dan
Hurley forced a runner out at third base to end the inning.
âThatâs been our normal defense all year,â American first baseman
Garret Hirsch said.
The American All-Stars got out of a bases-loaded, no-out situation
in the fourth inning in the first game of the series on Thursday.
Cherney hit a hard line drive down the third-base line that got
past the left fielder, allowing him to reach second in the third
inning and score when A.J. Roth doubled to center. Roth stole third
and scored on a passed ball to increase the National lead to 3-0
before the five run fifth. The Nationals added two more runs in the
sixth inning for the 10-0 final.
Kiser, Castillo and Roth combined to allow two hits and only had
four runners reach second base in the game.
âWe havenât faced that caliber of pitching all year,â American
Manager Jeff Hirsch said. âBut Iâm real proud of everyone of my kids.
Our bats didnât come around today, but itâs been a great year.
Hopefully it will end differently next year.â
Brown said the difference in the game was his approach to the
kidsâ natural jovial moods.
âFrom Day One, I told these guys they were the biggest group of
goofballs Iâve ever coached,â he said. âI backed off them [Saturday].
I told them to go out there and play loose and fun, and it showed.â
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